Help us raise $50,000 for Families living with Muscular Dystrophy by participating in The Wobbly Boots Virtual Race around Australia.

Every $2 donated is tax deductable and becomes a virtual kilometre in a race against Warren and Kathy who are doing real kilometres in their camper wagon in an epic 6 month, 25000km journey around Australia.
All donations are receipted directly to Muscular Dystrophy Tasmania.
Currently in:

Journey Complete

100
%
Wozza & Kathy
31000 km
of 25,000km
60
%
Donors
15150km
of 25,000km

Latest Wobbly Boots Big Lap Episode

Follow our adventures on YouTube with a new episode posted every week.
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Welcome to Wobbly Boots

Wobbly Boots Big Lap is both a fundraising event for Muscular Dystrophy Tasmania and an accessibility awareness initiative for travellers with a disability. 

MDT is a volunteer-based organisation that is dedicated to making a positive difference in the lives of Tasmanian families living with Muscular Dystrophy and other allied neuromuscular disorders like mine.

My name is Warren and I was born with Charcot Marie Tooth, It's a rare condition, affecting about one in every 2,500 people. It's caused by damage to the peripheral nerves which control muscle movement and results in severe muscle wasting to the legs and arms.

I'm just a regular guy who loves landscape photography,  exploring Australia and happens to have a disability.

My partner Kathy and I are hitting the road in our Kia Carnival camper wagon in late May on a six-month journey around Australia. 

But Wobbly Boots is different to the usual travel stories, we will travel to every single state and will be using this travel blog to share our experiences, thoughts, and feelings about traveling with a disability.


Why are we doing this?

As stated above I have a neuromuscular disorder called Charcot Marie Tooth (CMT) which in Australia affects around 1 in 2500 people. 

CMT is a condition that leads to muscle wasting and weakness. It starts at the extremities of the body, the lower legs and hands, and works its way in on a slow, relentless, and debilitating march damaging the nerve tissue that allows muscles to work properly. To date, there is no treatment or cure for CMT.


Truth be told though, I don't think about my condition all that much. Of course, it's always there in the background, threatening to upend me in a Woolies car park, send me back home when I can't navigate a steep flight of stairs or path, or struggle to fill in an unexpected form legibly. But it doesn't define me. I have the same hopes, dreams and aspirations as anybody else and a determination to pursue them.

One of my long-term ambitions is to drive around Australia on a big lap. With a wheelchair lurking somewhere over the horizon, my wonderfully supportive partner Kathy and I have decided to make the 6-month trip sooner rather than later in our camper wagon. So it was with some excitement that I sat down to begin planning the trip of a lifetime late last year.

Needing to take my mobility issues into account, my excitement was dulled very quickly when I realised the lack of practical information out there on traveling with a disability.

In Australia, approximately 4.4 million of us are living with disability, including half of the population aged over 65. Three-quarters of those or 3.3 million people are physically disabled in some way and slightly less than half of those travel for pleasure regularly. Add family members, travel companions, and visitors from overseas into these numbers and the disabled travel market in Australia can be worth as much as 8 billion dollars annually.

Surely, with those kinds of numbers, someone by now would have developed a platform that allowed disabled people to exchange their experiences, rate and review hotels and attractions, and plan their trips using accurate and up-to-date information on accessibility at tourism-based venues.

It appears not!

So Wobbly Boots was created. Kathy and I will be blogging on wobblyboots.com.au and uploading weekly youtube videos chronicling our adventures as we explore this great brown land of ours, including reviews, advice, and practical information on accommodation, attractions, and traveling with a disability in general. Of course, the list won't be exhaustive; there's only so much ground we can cover in 6 months after all, but it'll be a solid platform to build on.

On our return, we'll be launching the Wobbly Boots platform to all disabled travelers in Australia, to build on our experiences and allow them to record their own accessible experiences and opinions on tourism businesses in order to create a comprehensive and definitive online guide to disabled travel in Australia.
Join the Race

Latest Blog  Posts:

June 12, 2022
Capital

With our way north to Parkes from Narrandera stymied by persistent rain and subzero overnight temperatures, we decided to move Canberra up in the schedule and spend a couple of nights in a warm hotel room in the heart of our nation's capital. A leisurely drive through Wagga Wagga and Gundagai had Parliament House in […]

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May 31, 2022
Deni

We only spent a few hours there but Deniliquin or Deni to the locals sure made an impression on us. Waring Gardens in the middle of town was a beautiful setting to take a quick stroll and stretch the legs after the drive up from Echuca. Large grassy areas, a large pond full of birdlife […]

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May 30, 2022
Victoria's Silo Art Trail

Victoria's Silo Art Trail is, or was, a longstanding bucket list item for me. I have always been fascinated by the sheer scale of the artworks that have been created on these huge structures and the connection the artists have made with the people of the region they are situated in. Our trail experience started […]

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April 23, 2022
Cactus Country - Weird, wacky and wonderful

Cactus Country is a unique attraction in Strathmerton, about a three hour drive from Melbourne or an hour from Echuca. Australia's biggest cactus garden seamlessly takes you to the Mexican Mojave, African Sahara, and Argentinian Patagonia as you stroll through the eight wheelchair accessible pathways and explore the 12-acre gardens, which feature thousands of weird […]

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View All Posts

Check Race Progress

Please Give Generously
All proceeds of the Wobbly Boots Big Lap go directly MDT and allow them to make a real difference in the lives of Tasmanian families struggling with the effects of Muscular Dystrophy and similar allied conditions.
Please be patient if you contact us - there will be times when we have no reception and we will usually be checking emails and messages at night as our days will be full.
Thankyou for your Interest and support :)  - Warren and Kathy 
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